(Bloomberg) — Global investors are snapping up Chinese blue chips from large consumer staples to financial firms again as the nation’s stocks rally on optimism about a reopening from Covid curbs.
Most Read from Bloomberg
Italy’s Most-Wanted Mafia Boss Arrested After 30 Years
European Stocks Rise as US Futures Signal Caution: Markets Wrap
Pfizer Bivalent Vaccine Linked to Strokes in Preliminary Data
The Apartment Market Is About to Get Ugly
Anticipating a demand rebound, foreign investors have bought about 12 billion yuan ($1.8 billion) of liquor firm Wuliangye Yibin Co. via a trading link with Hong Kong in 10 weeks through Jan. 10, followed by more than 10 billion yuan worth of spirits maker Kweichow Moutai Co., according to data compiled by Bloomberg. They also bought a similar amount in Ping An Insurance Group Co. of China during the period given expectations of benefits from Beijing’s property rescue efforts.
Such purchases have helped push the benchmark CSI 300 Index to its highest level in almost five months.
The recent rally in China’s stock market underscores expectations of a rebound in the nation’s economy when most developed countries are seen heading into a recession. Overseas funds’ return to the country’s value stocks reflects their confidence in the economy after lockdown-induced economic weakness tilted them toward growth and cyclical names.
Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. and Midea Group Co. are also among the major companies benefiting from the buying spree. The wave of buying has helped the CSI 300 outperform other major onshore stock gauges, advancing 18% from its October low — a performance that outstrips the Shanghai Composite’s 12% rise during the period.
Though it’s still far from the MSCI China Index’s 50% rally, a surge in trading turnover on Monday showed there’s more room to run. Foreign inflows reached about 44 billion yuan last week, the most since May 2021, and overseas investors bought another 15.8 billion yuan worth of A shares Monday, the most since mid-November and making it the longest buying streak since June last year.
–With assistance from Mengchen Lu.
(Updates flows figures in sixth paragraph)
Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
Airlines Resurrect Ancient Jumbo Jets to Meet First- and Business-Class Demand
Starbucks’s New CEO Has Tall Orders to Fill
Used-Car Prices Are Finally Dropping
What We Got Right and Wrong About 2022
Housing Pain to Continue Until Economy Slows and Prices Fall
©2023 Bloomberg L.P.
(Bloomberg) — China’s reopening and an ebbing energy crisis are expected to give Europe's economy a boost this year, helping it avoid a recession, the latest MLIV Pulse survey shows.Most Read from BloombergItaly’s Most-Wanted Mafia Boss Arrested After 30 YearsEuropean Stocks Rise as US Futures Signal Caution: Markets WrapPfizer Bivalent Vaccine Linked to Strokes in Preliminary DataThe Apartment Market Is About to Get UglyA series of rate hikes by the European Central Bank aimed at taming the re
The U.S. dollar is going to drop further, Morgan Stanley strategists said over the weekend as they became more optimistic about the global economy
In this video, I will go over Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing's (NYSE: TSM) fourth-quarter earnings report. The company beat on earnings but missed revenue estimates due to weak demand, which it expects to continue this year.
Sales expected to slide 0.5%
(Bloomberg) — US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen will hold her first face-to-face meeting with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He on Jan. 18 in Zurich, making a detour on her way to talks in Africa. Most Read from BloombergEuropean Stocks Rise as US Futures Signal Caution: Markets WrapItaly’s Most-Wanted Mafia Boss Arrested After 30 YearsPfizer Bivalent Vaccine Linked to Strokes in Preliminary DataThe Apartment Market Is About to Get UglyThe pair “will exchange views on macroeconomic developments and
Benjamin Tiry, a senior at Laurel High School, placed second and earned $200 while sophomore Bridger Clavadetscher won $100 in fourth place.
In this article, we will be taking a look at the 25 countries that have the most debt per capita. To skip our detailed analysis, you can go directly to see the 5 countries that have the most debt per capita. The U.S. has a problem with its debt, which has exceeded $31 trillion in […]
In this video, I will be talking about Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), specifically some new price targets from analysts, and how things could evolve in 2023 now that China is reopening. For the full insights, watch the video, consider subscribing, and click the special offer link below.
The differences between Roth IRAs and traditional IRAs lie in the timing of their tax breaks, eligibility standards, and the access they offer.
Today we'll do a simple run through of a valuation method used to estimate the attractiveness of Valero Energy…
Here is a step-by-step guide for converting a nondeductible IRA to a Roth IRA and calculating how much you will have to pay in taxes.
Discover why two FAANG stocks are poised to bounce back in 2023 and beat the market with their current spring-loaded share price discounts, while another looks like a questionable idea today.
The chip sector is getting back on its proverbial feet after a challenging period, but not every stock is a winner.
Futures were mixed, with U.S. markets closed for the Martin Luther King Holiday. Time to act, carefully, as the rally clears resistance. Tesla faces a big transition.
Historically, in the first positive year following a loss, the Nasdaq-100 returned between 37% and 64%, or an average of 51% across the four instances in 1991, 2003, 2009, and 2019. Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) is one of the safest bets on Wall Street and gets praise from analysts and retail investors alike. Microsoft has billions of customers using its legacy software products like the Windows operating system and the Office 365 document suite, but its business is now more diverse than ever.
Sin is in.
Don’t just consume food, invest in it.
You earned that money, might as well hold onto it.
Select analysts foresee triple-digit gains in the new year for these innovative, fast-paced companies.
Shares of MercadoLibre (NASDAQ: MELI) flew higher last week, jumping 16% on Thursday and Friday, on some surprising news. A top rival in Brazil, Americanas S.A., was unraveling in an accounting scandal that led to the ouster of its CEO and CFO and wiped out roughly 80% of its stock price in one day. Americanas is Brazil's largest online retailer, but the company is reeling following the revelation of $3.88 billion in accounting inconsistencies — debt that it hadn't previously reported.
Foreigners Return to China Bluechips as Stocks Near Bull Market – Yahoo Finance
Date:
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -